101 research outputs found
Symmetry Protected Invariant Scattering Properties for Arbitrary Polarizations
Polarization independent Mie scattering of building blocks is foundational
for constructions of optical systems with robust functionalities. Conventional
studies for such polarization independence are generally restricted to special
states of either linear or circular polarizations, widely neglecting
elliptically-polarized states that are generically present in realistic
applications. Here we present a comprehensive recipe to achieve invariant
scattering properties (including extinction, scattering and absorption) for
arbitrary polarizations, requiring only rotation symmetry and absence of
optical activities. It is discovered that sole rotation symmetries can
effectively decouple the two scattering channels that originate from the
incident circularly polarized waves of opposite handedness, leading to
invariance of all scattering properties for any polarizations on the same
latitude circle of the Poincar\'{e} sphere. Further incorporations of extra
inversion or mirror symmetries would eliminate the optical activities and thus
ensure scattering property invariance for arbitrary polarizations. In sharp
contrast to previous investigations that rely heavily on complicated algebraic
formulas, our arguments are fully intuitive and geometric, bringing to surface
the essential physical principles rather than obscuring them. The
all-polarization invariance we reveal is induced by discrete spatial symmetries
of the scattering configurations, underlying which there are functioning laws
of reciprocity and conservation of parity and helicity. This symmetry-protected
intrinsic invariance is robust against any symmetry-preserving perturbations,
which may render extra flexibilities for designing optical devices with stable
functionalities.Comment: 6 pages and 5 figures; Comments to be appreciate
Evolution and global charge conservation for polarization singularities emerging from nonhermitian degeneracies
Core concepts in singular optics, especially the polarization singularity,
have rapidly penetrated the surging fields of topological and nonhermitian
photonics. For open photonic structures with degeneracies in particular, the
polarization singularity would inevitably encounter another sweeping concept of
Berry phase. Several investigations have discussed, in an inexplicit way, the
connections between both concepts, hinting at that nonzero topological charges
for far-field polarizations on a loop is inextricably linked to its nontrivial
Berry phase when degeneracies are enclosed. In this work, we reexamine the
seminal photonic crystal slab that supports the fundamental two-level
nonhermitian degeneracies. Regardless of the invariance of nontrivial Berry
phase for different loops enclosing both exceptional points, we demonstrate
that the associated polarization fields exhibit topologically inequivalent
patterns that are characterized by variant topological charges, including even
the trivial scenario of zero charge. It is further revealed that for both
bands, the seemingly complex evolutions of polarizations are bounded by the
global charge conservation, with extra points of circular polarizations playing
indispensable roles. This indicates that tough not directly associated with any
local charges, the invariant Berry phase is directly linked to the globally
conserved charge, the physical principles underlying which have all been
further clarified by a modified Berry-Dennis model. Our work can potentially
trigger an avalanche of studies to explore subtle interplays between Berry
phase and all sorts of optical singularities, shedding new light on subjects
beyond photonics that are related to both Berry phase and singularities.Comment: The modified Berry-Dennis model in the previous version
(arXiv:2006.06517v1) has been further refined, getting rid of the artificial
field discontinuit
Global Mie Scattering
In various subdisciplines of optics and photonics, Mie theory has been
serving as a fundamental language and play indispensable roles widely.
Conventional studies related to Mie scattering largely focus on local
properties such as differential cross sections and angular polarization
distributions. Though spatially integrated features of total cross sections in
terms of both scattering and absorption are routine for investigations, they
are intrinsically dependent on the specific morphologies of both the scattering
bodies and the incident waves, consequently manifesting no sign of global
invariance. Here we propose global Mie scattering theory to explore topological
invariants for characterizations of scatterings by any obstacles of arbitrarily
structured or polarized coherent light. It is revealed that, independent of
distributions and interactions among the scattering bodies of arbitrary
geometric and optical parameters, in the far field inevitably there are
directions where the scatterings are either zero or circularly polarized.
Furthermore, for each such singular direction we can assign a half-integer
index and the index sum of all those directions are bounded to be a global
topological invariant of . The global Mie theory we propose, which is
mathematically simple but conceptually penetrating, can render new perspectives
for light scattering and topological photonics in both linear and nonlinear
regimes, and would potentially shed new light on the scattering of acoustic and
matter waves of various forms.Comment: Eight pages and four figures; Comments to welcom
Scattering invariance for arbitrary polarizations protected by joint spatial-duality symmetries
We reveal how to exploit joint spatial-electromagnetic duality symmetries to
obtain invariant scattering properties (including extinction, scattering,
absorption) of self-dual scattering systems for incident waves of arbitrary
polarizations. The electromagnetic duality ensures the helicity preservation
along all scattering directions, and thus intrinsically eliminates the
interferences between the two scattering channels originating from the
circularly polarized components of incident waves. This absence of interference
directly secures invariant scattering properties for all polarizations located
on the same latitude circle of the Poincar\'{e} sphere, which are characterized
by polarization ellipses of the same eccentricity and handedness. Further
incorporations of mirror and/or inversion symmetries would lead to such
invariance throughout the whole Poincar\'{e} sphere, guaranteeing invariant
scattering properties for all polarizations. Simultaneous exploitations of
composite symmetries of different natures render an extra dimension of freedom
for scattering manipulations, offering new insights for both fundamental
explorations and optical device engineering related to symmetry dictated
light-matter interactions.Comment: 6 pages and 4 figures; Comments to welcom
Ideal Kerker scattering by homogeneous spheres: the role of gain or loss
We reexamine a recent work [Phys. Rev. Lett. \textbf{125}, 073205 (2020)]
that investigates how the optical gain or loss (characterized by isotropic
complex refractive indexes) influences the ideal Kerker scattering of exactly
zero backward scattering. There it has been rigourously proved that, for
non-magnetic homogeneous spheres with incident plane waves, either gain or loss
prohibits such ideal Kerker scattering, provided that only electric and
magnetic multipoles of a specific order are present and contributions from
other multipoles can all be made precisely zero. Here we reveal that, when two
multipoles of a fixed order are perfectly matched in terms of both phase and
magnitude, multipoles of at least the next two orders cannot possibly be tuned
to be all precisely zero or even perfectly matched, and consequently cannot
directly produce ideal Kerker scattering. Moreover, we further demonstrate
that, when multipoles of different orders are simultaneously taken into
consideration, the loss or gain can serve as a helpful rather than harmful
contributing factor, for the eliminations of backward scattering.Comment: 6 pages and 3 figures; Comments are welcom
Extremize Optical Chiralities through Polarization Singularities
Chiral optical effects are generally quantified along some specific incident
directions of exciting waves (especially for extrinsic chiralities of achiral
structures) or defined as direction-independent properties by averaging the
responses among all structure orientations. Though of great significance for
various applications, chirality extremization (maximized or minimized) with
respect to incident directions or structure orientations have not been
explored, especially in a systematic manner. In this study we examine the
chiral responses of open photonic structures from perspectives of quasi-normal
modes and polarization singularities of their far-field radiations. The
nontrivial topology of the momentum sphere secures the existence of singularity
directions along which mode radiations are either circularly or linearly
polarized. When plane waves are incident along those directions, the
reciprocity ensures ideal maximization and minimization of optical chiralities,
for corresponding mode radiations of circular and linear polarizations
respectively. For directions of general elliptical polarizations, we have
unveiled the subtle equality of a Stokes parameter and the circular dichroism,
showing that an intrinsically chiral structure can unexpectedly exhibit no
chirality at all or even chiralities of opposite handedness for different
incident directions. The framework we establish can be applied to not only
finite scattering bodies but also infinite periodic structures, encompassing
both intrinsic and extrinsic optical chiralities. We have effectively merged
two vibrant disciplines of chiral and singular optics, which can potentially
trigger more optical chirality-singularity related interdisciplinary studies.Comment: Several mislabellings in v1 are corrected, with Supplemental Material
also include
Scattering Activities Bounded by Reciprocity and Parity Conservation
Scattering activities are generally manifest through different optical
responses of scattering bodies to circularly polarized light of opposite
handedness. Similar to the ubiquitous roles played by scattering theory across
different branches of photonics, scattering activities can serve as a
fundamental concept to clarify underlying mechanisms of various chiroptical
effects, both within and beyond scattering systems. In this work we investigate
scattering activities for reciprocal systems that exhibit various geometric
symmetries but are intrinsically achiral. We reveal how scattering activities
are generally bounded by reciprocity and parity conservation, demonstrating
that though extinction activity is usually eliminated by symmetry, scattering
activities in forms of distinct absorptions, scatterings or angular scattering
patterns can more widely emerge. Since our analyses are solely based on
fundamental laws of reciprocity and parity conservation, regardless of
geometric and optical parameters of the scattering systems studied, the
principles revealed are generically applicable. The intuitive and pictorial
framework we have established is beyond any specific coupling models, able to
reveal hidden connections between seemingly unrelated chiral manifestations,
and thus more accessible for a unified understanding of various chiroptical
effects.Comment: 8 pages and 7 figure
Electromagnetic Duality Protected Scattering Properties of Nonmagnetic Particles
Optical properties of nonmagnetic structures that support artificial
optically-induced magnetic responses have recently attracted surging interest.
Here we conduct symmetry-dictated investigations into scattering properties of
nonmagnetic particles from perspectives of electromagnetic duality with
discrete geometric rotations. For arbitrary scattering configurations, we
reveal that far-field scattering patterns are invariant under duality
transformations, which in particular means that scattering patterns of
self-dual clusters with random particle distributions are polarization
independent. Based on this revelation, it is further discovered that scattering
bodies of combined duality-(n-fold) rotation symmetry, for any polarizations of
incident waves, exhibit also n-fold rotationally symmetric scattering patterns
with zero backward components, satisfying the first Kerker condition
automatically. We employ both coupled dipole theory and full numerical
simulations to demonstrate those scattering properties, solely based upon
nonmagnetic core-shell particles that support optically-induced dipolar
resonances. Those substantiated scattering properties are fully induced by
fundamental symmetry principles, and thus can survive any non-symmetry-breaking
perturbations, which may find applications in a wide range of optical devices
that require intrinsically robust functionalities.Comment: 10 pages and 7 figures; Comments to be appreciate
Arbitrary Polarization-Independent Backscattering or Reflection by Rotationally-Symmetric Reciprocal Structures
We study the backward scatterings of plane waves by reciprocal scatterers and
reveal that -fold () rotation symmetry is sufficient to secure
invariant backscattering for arbitrarily-polarized incident plane waves. It is
further demonstrated that the same principle is also applicable for infinite
periodic structures in terms of reflection, which simultaneously guarantees the
transmission invariance if there are neither Ohmic losses nor extra diffraction
channels. At the presence of losses, extra reflection symmetries (with
reflection planes either parallel or perpendicular to the incident direction)
can be incorporated to ensure simultaneously the invariance of transmission and
absorption. The principles we have revealed are protected by fundamental laws
of reciprocity and parity conservation, which are fully independent of the
optical or geometric parameters of the photonic structures. The optical
invariance obtained is intrinsically robust against perturbations that preserve
reciprocity and the geometric symmetries, which could be widely employed for
photonic applications that require stable backscatterings or reflections.Comment: Arbitrary Polarizations; Backscattering Invariance; Rotation
Symmetry; Reciprocit
Scattering and absorption invariance of nonmagnetic particles under duality transformations
We revisit the total scatterings (in terms of extinction, scattering and
absorption cross sections) by arbitrary clusters of nonmagnetic particles that
support optically-induced magnetic responses. Our reexamination is conducted
from the perspective of the electromagnetic duality symmetry, and it is
revealed that all total scattering properties are invariant under duality
transformations. This secures that for self-dual particle clusters, the total
scattering properties are polarization independent for any fixed incident
direction; while for non-self-dual particle clusters, two scattering
configurations that are connected to each other through a duality
transformation would exhibit identical scattering properties. This
electromagnetic duality induced invariance is irrelevant to specific particle
distributions or wave incident directions, which is illustrated for both random
and periodic clusters.Comment: 7 pages and 6 figures; Comments to be appreciate
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